2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10734-009-9274-1
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Cheating by economics and business undergraduate students: an exploratory international assessment

Abstract: Today's economics and business students are expected to be our future business people and potentially the economic leaders and politicians of tomorrow. Thus, their beliefs and practices are liable to affect the definition of acceptable economics and business ethics. The empirical evaluation of the phenomenon of cheating in academia has almost exclusively focused on the US context, and non-US studies usually only cover a narrow range of countries. This paper presents a comprehensive, cross-country study on the … Show more

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Cited by 134 publications
(116 citation statements)
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References 58 publications
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“…McCabe et al (2012) note how the incidence of cheating has remained high over the past years in spite of academic effort to address this phenomenon. Similarly, Teixeira & Rocha (2010) report consistently high incidences of student cheating in an international study undertaken at 42 universities located in 21 countries. The ease of access to electronic sources has precipitated an increase, specifically, in one aspect of academic dishonesty, viz.…”
Section: Student Academic Dishonesty and Strategies To Address The Prmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…McCabe et al (2012) note how the incidence of cheating has remained high over the past years in spite of academic effort to address this phenomenon. Similarly, Teixeira & Rocha (2010) report consistently high incidences of student cheating in an international study undertaken at 42 universities located in 21 countries. The ease of access to electronic sources has precipitated an increase, specifically, in one aspect of academic dishonesty, viz.…”
Section: Student Academic Dishonesty and Strategies To Address The Prmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…They were more certain about the 'wrongness' of certain actions, did not experience the system as being too strict with regard to copying and felt more informed about ethical matters. Peppas (2002) and Teixeira and Rocha (2010) note how student values emanate from their cultures and Leask (2006) advances the idea that specifically plagiarism, as an act of academic dishonesty, is a culturally constructed concept resulting in views on this issue that may differ from one culture to the next. It is recognised that the effects of the apartheid system of unequal education have, to a great extent, still not been rectified twenty years after the advent of democracy in the country.…”
Section: Discussion and Recommendationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Teixeiras carried out a cross-country study on the determinants of economics and business undergraduate cheating that involves 7213 students in 21 countries from the American (4), European (14), Africa (2) and Oceania (1) continents and 7213 students. 25 She found that the average magnitude of copying among the economics and business undergraduates was quite high (62 per cent) but with a signifi cant cross-country differences. She suggested that average cheating propensity in academia is signifi cantly correlated with ' real world ' business corruption.…”
Section: Plagiarism and Cheatingmentioning
confidence: 99%